This summer, while Jenn and I were planning our wedding, I needed an escape, so I developed a recipe based on a predicament I found myself in after the most recent Celebrity Chefs of Canada (CCOC) event, which was hosted by Executive Chef Michael Blackie at the National Arts Centre. You see, all attendees of the annual event receive a booklet of recipes, essentially paired down versions of techniques and product lists the chefs used to prepare their event plates.

When I went to attempt Chefs Jason Duffy’s and Jason Bangerter’s plate, “Braised Elk Ribs with Creamy Polenta and Tasty Crispy Bits,” I discovered they had cleaned out the city’s stock of elk side ribs. Duffy is the executive chef behind The Lounge at Ottawa’s Arc the Hotel (140 Slater Street). Bangerter is the chef behind Toronto’s Oliver and Bonacini’s Canteen and Luma restaurants. Both Canteen and Luma are situated at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) Bell Lightbox (330 King Street W.) in the entertainment district.

Only able to source beef side ribs, I had to find a way to augment their flavour, compensating for the lack of elk “gaminess.” So, I reached for the miso and some maple syrup. I added cognac to the cure as an after thought. A cognac-infused “pan” sauce followed.

Red Miso Beef Ribs with Mushroom Cognac Sauce

During a grocery run, Jenn remarked to me, “Hey! What was the liqueur you brought home to cook with?”

“It’s got fruity notes, right? Floral? Citrus?” she asked, picking up a tray of cross-cut beef short ribs from the meat display.

“I’m going to kick your *$$ with something Korean-inspired!”

Flamed Cognac and Citrus Marinated Korean-inspired Short Ribs

In the end, neither one of us won. For the home-cook stream of the program, Steve Cylka’s dish of grilled duck breast with duxelle ravioli was chosen by a team of chef judges: Chef JP Challet of ICI Bistro, Chef Ben Heaton of The Grove, and Chef Michael Kirkwood of TURF Lounge. Cylka is a fellow food blogger. He blogs for The Black Peppercorn.

Steve Cylka of The Black Peppercorn

Cylka’s winning dish: Duck breast with Duxelle Ravioli

For the culinary student stream, judges chose Doug Burke’s dish of lobster corn chowder, he recently finishing the culinary program at Conestoga College. His fellow Conestoga classmate Holly Bruce competed with a marinated duck breast. Erica Guidi of Niagara College competed with a glazed pork chop with “forest mushroom quinoa.”

Chef-in-training Doug Burke of Conestoga College

Burke’s winning dish: Lobster Corn Chowder (served in puff pastry)

Chef-in-training Holly Bruce of Conestoga College

Bruce’s contest entry: Marinated Duck Breast

It was an experience Jenn and I could not have dreamed of. Originally fearing of poor turnout, we pooled our allotted guest list spots and called upon Toronto friends to join us. They were strictly instructed to pretend to enjoy our contest entries.

Red Miso Beef Ribs, made with Courvoisier VS

Korean-inspired Short Ribs, made with Courvoisier VS

foodiePrints’ Toronto correspondent Abby Li (@AbbyLi_36) worked tirelessly with the caterer, Daniel et Daniel, whose staff prepared all the competition dishes for the event. She critiqued flavours and textures, making sure the reference dishes tasted as our recipes meant them to. She attended the event to check out the competition as well.

We would learn invitees to the evening at Maison Mercer (15 Mercer Street, Toronto) were mostly media, both traditional and new media.

With some trepidation, I watched as Mary Luz Mejia (@MaryLuzOnFood) and her husband walked into the room. Mejia is quite the accomplished food writer (Toronto Life, City Bites, Toronto Star) and food TV producer and director.

Thankfully, I was sequestered in the corner of the dance club that was the venue, fittingly below one of the two Twitter walls. However, my station was very busy. People came back for seconds and thirds. My dish was first, and one of the few, to run out of the prepared 200 portions.

Don Chow’s red miso beef ribs were outstanding with deliciously strong flavours. Felt like he deliberately combined a French inspired cognac sauce with the Asian beef ribs and it just worked.

Jenn’s station, which was located with the chef judges’ stations, likewise saw heavy traffic. She noted one person came back 5-times.

Jenn at her station with amazing Roxy of Daniel et Daniel Catering

Exhausted after the evening, our friends ushered us out to Luma for drinks and desserts. Chef Bangerter generously treated us to some bubbly.

Thank-you to Courvoisier, Praxis, Matchstick, and Daniel et Daniel for quite the event.

Praxis and Matchstick wanted to encourage culinary creativity with Courvoisier cognac. Though there was much duck, given the variety of dishes served, both sweet and savoury, I think the program was a delicious success.

And, thanks to Meija’s suggestion, I know how to better my dish: serve it on top of freshly-made pappardelle.

Mild-mannered IT professional by day and food blogger by night, I founded foodiePrints with a single intention, to share my love of all things food. My first post shared a recipe. Many followed. Eventually, I learned Ottawa prepares and serves great food. Thereafter, I started meeting restaurateurs, chefs, cooks, farmers, and other local producers, all good people. Ideas for food-related content swirled in my head. foodiePrints grew into a place to put them. From exploring foreign and domestic cuisines to shopping for exotic ingredients and cobbling together my takes on dishes in my meager kitchen, there are stories to tell. Welcome to foodiePrints. Here, you will find stories about food and drink, cooking, and eating in Canada’s capital. Be it food-related or just food-for-thought, I hope you find something tasty here.

Comments

[…] In the following months, Don started Foodieprints and began posting pictures and writing about his adventures in cooking, convincing his future wife Jenn and her university school friends that a bachelor was perfectly […]

[...] to post it online. In the following months, Don began posting pictures and writing about his adventures in cooking, convincing his future wife Jenn and her university school friends that a bachelor was perfectly [...]

35 for Thirty-Five: A Thankful Post | foodiePrints
November 1, 2012 at 03:16pm

[...] But more on that later… [...]

Abby
October 31, 2012 at 07:38pm

Both your dishes were delicious! Actually, pretty much everything was delicious. And I swear it wasn't because the Courvoisier was flowing freely!